HIV treatment with dolutegravir and doravirine: rationale for selection and clinical outcomes in a highly treatment experienced population
Document Type
Journal Article
Publication Date
10-1-2022
Journal
International journal of STD & AIDS
Volume
33
Issue
12
DOI
10.1177/09564624221116533
Keywords
AIDS; Human immunodeficiency virus; antiretroviral therapy; combination ART; treatment
Abstract
Dolutegravir and doravirine are individually safe and effective antiretroviral therapy (ART) components, but their combined use has not been studied in clinical trials and is not recommended in HIV treatment guidelines. We noted persons with HIV (PWH) receiving dolutegravir with doravirine at our Washington, DC, infectious disease clinic and undertook a service evaluation to understand why providers selected this ART, whether HIV virologic suppression was achieved and identify adverse effects of concomitant use. Case registry and prescriptions data identified 21 PWH receiving concomitant dolutegravir and doravirine with mean follow-up 576.1 days (range 413-751); frequent reasons for switching were multiple ART resistance (57.1%), proton pump inhibitor usage (28.6%) and renal failure (28.6%), with 52.4% switched from protease inhibitor or cobicistat-boosted regimens. Dolutegravir with doravirine alone was prescribed for 60%, and additional ART in 40%. During 12 months follow-up mean CD4 was 585.9 (baseline 570.7) with undetectable viral load in 77.8% (baseline 66.7%). No discontinuations for drug-related adverse events or virologic failure occurred. Dolutegravir with doravirine was well tolerated in small numbers of highly treatment experienced PWH at our clinic, achieving virologic suppression in most. Establishing the efficacy and safety of dolutegravir with doravirine for HIV treatment in randomized trials remains important.
APA Citation
Denyer, Rachel; Zemskova, Julie; and Benator, Debra A., "HIV treatment with dolutegravir and doravirine: rationale for selection and clinical outcomes in a highly treatment experienced population" (2022). GW Authored Works. Paper 1843.
https://hsrc.himmelfarb.gwu.edu/gwhpubs/1843
Department
Medicine